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"Daniel Sanderson was a Wesleyan Missionary, who served in India, in the Wesleyan Canarese Mission, at the Bangalore Petah, Mysore, Tumkur and Gubbi, between 1842–1867. Sanderson was a linguist and a Kannada scholar. He is credited with co-authoring the first Kannada-English dictionary, published in 1858 by the Wesleyan Mission Press with the financial support by Sir Mark Cubbon. He also translated Lakshmisa's magnum opus, the Jaimini Bharata, into English. On return to England, he was appointed as the director of the Richmond Theological College. Sarah Sanderson Wesleyan Village Chapel and School Near Bangalore by Thomas Hodson (1859) The Little Hindoo School Girl (p.81, June 1866, Sarah Sanderson) Sarah Sanderson was the wife of Rev. Daniel Sanderson, who writing for the Wesleyan Juvenile Offering describes life in the Bangalore Pete in the 19th Century. Writing on 24 November 1858, Sarah describes the Wesleyan Mission School and Chapel in a Pariah village near the Bangalore Petah. The article also carried a sketch of the same, by Thomas Hodson. This school had some 30 children, 22 boys and 8 girls. They were taught by John a native catechist. Divine services were held on Sundays in Canarese at 7:30AM. The congregation consisted of 8-10 men and 25-30 children, and many others listening from outside the door. However, most seemed to attend out of curiosity of seeing the European ladies and men. The church services commenced by ringing the bell. Further, she describes the social scorn and humiliation suffered by the Pariah community, such as not being allowed to even walk in the street of the high caste people, untouchability practiced for the fear of pollution by lower castes. However, the Europeans readily employed servants from the Pariah communities and their children sent to Mission schools, brightening their employment prospects. Further, Sarah Sanderson, writing on 24 September 1859, describes the pettah as the native town of Bangalore with a population of about 60,000. The petah had nearly 200-300 temples or shrines, whose deities were anointed with oil making them greasy and black, and offered flowers and fruit. The petah now had 2 Christian churches, one was the London Mission Canarese Chapel (now Rice Memorial Church on Avenue Road) and the other was the Canarese Wesleyan Chapel opened a few months before September 1859. To the left of the Wesleyan Chapel was a low building, which had been altered and white-washed to serve as a school. The chapel did not have pews or a gallery. The floor was covered with bamboo matting, and there were rows of benches with seats of fancy cane-work (or rattan). 8 oil lamps using coconut oil were suspended from the ceiling to be used to lighting in the evenings. The windows which were generally kept open had iron bars to keep out the monkeys. Further, she says that her children liked walking the busy streets of the petah to reach the chapel along with their father, observing its noise, local people, shops and the monkeys. Monkeys were numerous in the Petah, and created nuisance by stealing food and other things from people. Sarah describes some events such as a postman walking up to the pulpit to deliver a letter to the preacher in the middle of his sermon on a Sunday. Another, when the Muslim mourning of 'Moharrum' was being observed when she attended church one evening. The people used to walk in and out of the chapel as they pleased. All so different from the quiet atmosphere of any Wesleyan Chapel in England. Canarese Selections Jaimini Bharata, Wesleyan Mission Press, Bangalore, 1852 Daniel wrote the Katha sangraha or Canarese Selections: Prose which was published by the Wesleyan Mission Press in 1863. The work consists of 6 parts * Part I: Stories from the Panchatantra and various other sources * Part II: Extracts from the Shiva Purana * Part III: Extracts from the Maha Bharata * Part IV: Extracts from the Ramayana * Part V: The Ten incarnations of Vishnu * Part VI: Notable works * A dictionary, Canarese and English (1858) * The Jaimini Bharata: A Celebrated Canarese Poem, with Translations and Notes (1852) * Dialogues in Canarese (1858) * Katha sangraha or Canarese Selections: Prose (1863) See also *Hudson Memorial Church, Bangalore *Rice Memorial Church, Bangalore *United Mission School *William Arthur Memorial Church, Gubbi References Category:Wesleyan Canarese Mission Category:Missionary educators Category:Missionary linguists Category:Methodist missionaries in India Category:Dravidologists Category:Linguists of Kannada Category:Kannada grammar Category:Translators of the Bible into Kannada Category:Military personnel from Bangalore Category:English Methodist missionaries Category:1810 births Category:Year of death missing "
"Roy Eric Farnsworth (1892-1957) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played in the 1910s. Playing career Youngest brother of the famous rugby league footballers: Bill Farnsworth and Viv Farnsworth, Roy Farnsworth was also a noted Half-back with Newtown. Roy enlisted in the Australian Army in World War I in 1915 AIF Project: World War One Nominal Roll "Roy Eric Farnsworth" https://www.aif.adfa.edu.au/showPerson?pid=94644 , and although he survived the war he did not play for Newtown again. In 1919 he turned out for Western Suburbs for a few games, before retiring from the NSWRFL. Alan Whiticker/Glen Hudson: Encyclopedia of Rugby League Players, 1995. Death Farnsworth died on 19 June 1957 at Concord, New South Wales.Sydney Morning Herald 22 JUN 1957 DEATH NOTICE References Category:Newtown Jets players Category:Western Suburbs Magpies players Category:New South Wales rugby league team players Category:Rugby league players from Sydney Category:Rugby league halfbacks Category:Australian rugby league players Category:Australian military personnel of World War I Category:1892 births Category:1957 deaths "
"A software testing certification board is an organization that provides professional certification for software testing and software quality assurance. Notable boards =British Computer Society= The British Computer Society (BCS) is a British learned society that offers software testing certification. Since 2012, its professional software testing certification has been the successor to Systems Analysis Examination Board (SAEB) and the Information Systems Examination Board (ISEB). =International Software Certification Board= The International Software Certification Board (ISCB) is an international software testing board, affiliated with the Quality Assurance Institute (QAI). The ISCB was founded in 1980. Since 1985, it has offered the Certified Software Quality Analyst (CSQA) certification, originally called Certified Quality Analyst (CQA). =International Software Testing Qualifications Board= The International Software Testing Qualifications Board (ISTQB) is an international software testing board, founded in 2002.https://europeangaming.eu/portal/latest- news/2019/08/07/52162/approval-of-foundation-level-gambling-industry-tester- specialist-syllabus-by-istqb/ The ISTQB has 58 member boards, including the American Software Testing Qualifications Board (ASTQB), the Australia and New Zealand Testing Board (ANZTB), the Czech and Slovak Testing Board (CaSTB), the Hungarian Testing Board (HTB), and the Sri Lanka Software Testing Board (SLSTB). References External links * ISCB official site * ISTQB official site Category:Software testing "